More updates from Joyce Malone trial: Jury asks for testimony to be read back

ANOTHER UPDATE: The jury sent another note at 1:15 p.m. asking for some of Joyce Malone's testimony to be read back to them.

The testimony was read back beginning at 2:19 after the court stenographer located all the testimony on the computer.

The jury wanted to hear what Malone said as it related to what she remembered from March 19, the day Ralph Malone was shot. They also wanted to hear what she remembered after leaving her daughter Brenda Eddy's house on that day.

In the testimony, Malone said she didn't remember shooting her husband, didn't remember the recoil of the gun and didn't remember smelling gunpowder. She said "it's like someone else shot him. It wasn't me. It's like I wasn't even there. It's a fog."

UPDATE: At noon, the jury in the Joyce Malone murder trial again asked for the definition of extreme emotional disturbance to be read to them.

The jury first asked Oswego County Court Judge Walter Hafner Jr. if they could have a copy of the definition. He told them no and then he read the definition to them again.

He explained during the read-back that if they believe Malone's lawyer James Eby proved Malone suffered from extreme emotional disturbance, she could be found guilty of a lesser charge of first-degree manslaughter. But if Eby did not prove she suffered from extreme emotional disturbance, she would be found guilty of murder.

If the jury doesn't think Assistant District Attorney Gregory Oakes proved his case, Malone would have to be found not guilty of the murder charge.

Stay tuned for more updates.

Oswego, NY -- The jury in the Joyce Malone murder trial this morning began deliberations by asking for the testimony of Sheriff Reuel Todd to be read back to them.

The jury also asked for a definition of extreme emotional disturbance, which is the defense being used by lawyer James Eby in defending Malone.

Malone, 70, is charged with second-degree murder in the shooting death of her husband, Ralph, 74, in March in their Tug Hill Road home in the town of Oswego.